At present count, I've gone to the theaters to see "Little Miss Sunshine" six times. And the DVD comes out this month. At home, I could watch "Vibes" with Cyndi Lauper and Jeff Goldblum all day, every day. (Why is it always the stupid movies we can watch ad nauseum?)

I have a theory about that--it's pretty lame, and it involves tired analogies about snowflakes and fingerprints--but basically boils down to everyone getting affected differently by the music or the movie. There is literally no predicting who will like what--or how much they will like it.

That's why I looove the movie Mumford and it seems like no one else has heard of it.

I watched Edward Scissorhands again last night - it's my favorite movie of all movies. It always makes me cry, without exception. Repeatedly, throughout the entire film; not just at one or two certain points. It's just so damned heartbreaking.

Well, now, there's one movie that makes me cry: I Am Sam. I think it's because I have a little girl--and we might be having another one--and I just spend the whole movie thinking how devastated I would be if my babies were taken away.

A long time ago, when I was a kid, there was a cartoon movie that made me cry, but now I think I've blocked it out of my mind. It was something silly, like Sleeping Beauty, but I would just get so into the movie that I couldn't help it.

Now I like scary movies a lot more--and I still get way too involved. In Arachnophobia, when that first spider jumps on the camera? Freaks! Me! Out! Every! Time!

Hey! I saw 'Failure to Launch' a while back, and I couldn't figure out why Zooey looked so familiar; it had just been a while since I saw Mumford, and she's grown up a little. But every time I see "My Name is Earl" I remember where I saw that guy the first time.

LOVE Labyrinth, too--when I was a kid, I loved any movie with puppets in it. Dark Crystal was awesome--and can you believe they said they're making a sequel to that?

I'm probably the only guy I know that saw Bridget Jones' Diary--favorite scene: "It's Raining Men" blasting in the background while Colin Firth and Hugh Grant come smashing through the window!!! Wooooot! (Ahem. Second favorite: Renee running down the street in her underwear.) And if you're a Battlestar Galactica Fan, you get the bonus of seeing Gaius Baltar when he was just Gaius. (Ouch on the pun.)

I don't know if I've seen any movie too many times, but each episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000 had a full-length movie in it. My favorite is still "Overdrawn at the Memory Bank", though my sister and I both also love "Invasion of the Neptune Men".

I have been trying to organize an event with my siblings--five brothers and me--where we film ourselves from behind while we watch some movie and heckle it to death. It's what we do anyway, and it would be nice to have; my kids have already started doing it during Disney movies.

My kids have a movie obsession that I share with them: Pirates of the Caribbean--the first one. I haven't let them see the sequel yet. We used to watch it at least once a week. Who doesn't love Captain Jack Sparrow?

And he's so frickin' scary, too. I didn't even know he was scary (I am an SNL freak) until I saw Tim Burton's Sleepy Hollow. What a wakeup! All the reviews of Hairspray I've seen though are all totally focused on Travolta being in drag. Get over yourselves, we aren't blind, people!

Ruby Falls wrote:And he's so frickin' scary, too. I didn't even know he was scary (I am an SNL freak) until I saw Tim Burton's Sleepy Hollow. What a wakeup! All the reviews of Hairspray I've seen though are all totally focused on Travolta being in drag. Get over yourselves, we aren't blind, people!

Travolta was tough to get used to - he looks like a dude in a fat suit, instead of...well, Devine. But after the second time I saw it, I started to adjust and see him as a characeter.

Christopher Walken was creepy for me first, then funny later in life. I grew up watching creepy Walken movies like "The Dead Zone" and "The Deer Hunter."

Well, Divine WAS actually fat. I guess that makes it a bit different. He is one of the few actors that can scare me in daylight. I started watching Tim Burton at the age of 2. He can be scary when he wants to. I never really started to realize how twisted Nightmare could be until 10 years later. (Still favorite movie ever.)